chapter 23. fauves = “wild beasts” fauves = “wild beasts” simple design simple design bright...
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Art of the Early Twentieth CenturyChapter 23
Fauvism
•Fauves = “Wild Beasts”• simple design•bright colors• loose brushwork•art = a form of personal expression
Henri Matisse•Purpose: to express happiness and pleasure•Emphasis on design and organization of visual qualities•The Red Studio•The Knife Thrower
Walls have no corners
Round objects look flat No shadows
Simple shapes and few colors
German Expressionism
•Artworks communicated strong emotional feelings•Brucke Manifesto: •the young and new should replace the old and established•art should be first and foremost about life.
German Expressionism:
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
•Founder •Street, Berlin •expresses the tension and artificial elegance of the city.
Faces are masks: cardboard with slashes for the mouths and eyes.
True faces remain hidden.
German Expressionism:
Käthe Kollwitz•Purpose: •protest the tragic plight of the poor before and after WWI
•Expressed ideas in etchings, woodcuts, and lithographs•Poverty
German Expressionism:
Edvard Munch•Subject matter•fear, suffering, and experience of death
•Showed the world through the eyes of those in anguish•The Sick Child•The Scream
One version sold May 2, 2012 for $119.9 million
Non-Objective Art• style that uses color, line, texture, and unrecognizable shapes/forms.•No apparent references to reality•Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider) •Collective of artists united by desire to express inner feelings in their paintings, though their styles differed.
Non-Objective Art:
Wassily Kandinsky
•Believed that art elements could be arranged to communicate feelings and emotions•Art should NOT illustrate an object.• Improvisation 28 (Second Version)
Cubism•Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso• Influences:•Cézanne: all shapes in nature are based on the sphere , the cone, and the cylinder•Paint 3-dimensional objects as if seeing them from many angles at once on a flat surface
The Glass of Absinthe – Pablo Picasso
Guernica -- Pablo Picasso
Cubist Collage• Add materials to painting surface•Cloth, Newspaper clippings, labels
• Purpose: to make surface of paintings richer• Guitar – Pablo Picasso
Chapter 23 Lesson Two
Contributions from Mexico and the United States
Muralists in Mexico
•After Mexican Revolution of 1921•Subject matter: political and social problems of the Mexican people•Used to tell of revolutions, native traditions, festivals and legends•On both interior and exterior walls•Meant to be public property
Diego Rivera
•A founder of Mexican mural painting•Studied art of Italian fresco artists•Liberation of the Peon•Revolutionary soldiers cut the ropes binding a dead peon (peasant)•Peasant’s liberation is in death
José Clemente Orozco
•“The Mexican Goya”•Express anger for all forms of tyranny•Zapatistas•Barricade
ZapatistasFollowers of Emiliano Zapata march to battle
Barricade/La Trinchera
David Alfaro Siqueiros• A founder of Mexican mural painting• Subject: political• Echo of a Scream •Protest against war •Overlapping flat shapes•Variety of contrasting light and dark values•Abstract design•Gradation of value to create a 3-D quality and project forms forward in space
• Overlapping flat shapes
• Variety of contrasting light and dark values
• Abstract design
• Gradation of value to create a 3-D quality and project forms forward in space
Frida Kahlo
•Not a muralist•Purpose of art to express personal feelings about herself•Frida and Diego Rivera•Wedding portrait •Solemn expressions = uncertainty about future
American Art: The Ashcan School
•Group of artists who made realistic pictures of the most ordinary features of the contemporary scene•Goal: record the city’s color, excitement, and glamour•Nightlife, cafes, streets, alleys, theaters
John Sloan
•Backyards, Greenwich Village•Each element leads to another as view it•Illustrates child’s gift of finding joy and pleasure in almost any situation
George Bellows
•Similar to those of Ashcan school but not one of them•Subject: sports•Stag at Sharkey’s•Determination and action captured with strong diagonal lines and blurred contours
Armory Show of 1913
•First large exhibition of modern art in America•Featured both European art (Fauves, Cubists, Expressionists) and American art•New York later replaced Paris as the art capital of the world